tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357316514436369105.post2923072934411599184..comments2024-03-11T15:40:37.015+00:00Comments on Theoretical Structural Archaeology: 2016 - Review of the YearGeoff Carterhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01111820035762957610noreply@blogger.comBlogger10125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357316514436369105.post-85754230477449616032019-02-26T09:58:09.143+00:002019-02-26T09:58:09.143+00:00This comment has been removed by the author.Darshana Mhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09958209124363222216noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357316514436369105.post-62249392244044869702017-11-20T13:18:37.674+00:002017-11-20T13:18:37.674+00:00iWantv! 'ABS-CBN live spilling' appears wi...iWantv! 'ABS-CBN live spilling' appears with only 1 click! – LopezLink. Jan 28, 2010 - iWantv! gives you a chance to get well known shows in video-on-request and live channel groups. The video-on-request choice makes live gushing of iWant television 2.3.2 for Android – Download Dialect. 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More on the web and cell phone clients keep on watching ABS-CBN programs online by means of the video-on-request and livestreaming administration iWanTV. <a href="https://sites.google.com/site/pinoychannelako/" rel="nofollow">Source</a><br />Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06894450538255026661noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357316514436369105.post-40376892128063478992017-01-12T00:57:21.493+00:002017-01-12T00:57:21.493+00:00The Neolithic, like the Bronze Age, took some time...The Neolithic, like the Bronze Age, took some time to some time to get to the British Isles, it can only have got here via N or W Europe. <br />I am not very interested in conspiracy,and while "official" religions/cults can be managed, the idea that the consequences of a piece of devotional literature could be foreseen I cannot accept; clearly, all devotional literature has context / addenda and does arise in a vacuum, but the consequences may take decades/centuries to be observed; It can be long process before a cult becomes a religion.<br />In this context, the original target of the story in Mark was the Jewish diaspora, and it should be seen in this context. <br />I also like Richard Carriers work. <br />Geoff Carterhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01111820035762957610noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357316514436369105.post-29959730474454405472017-01-11T15:27:41.159+00:002017-01-11T15:27:41.159+00:00Perhaps the Dutch migrated to Orkney, taking Belgi...Perhaps the Dutch migrated to Orkney, taking Belgian voles with them! The tv programme told us that the closest relatives of the Orkney voles are those of Belgium. They didn't mention any relatives of the people (before the Vikings got to them), but the landscape might have attracted them because it is also a low lying convoluted entanglement of land and water. Maybe this was a foreshadowing of the subsequent maritime might of the Rhine delta? Any sign of the export of stones from Orkney to the low countries (perhaps to pay for voles!)?<br /><br />I see you have a link to Joseph Atwill's blog. Perhaps you might also be interested in Flavio Barbiero, who extends Atwill's insight considerably. Not many people can previously have seen Mithraism and Christianity as two sides of the same conspiracy.<br />https://grahamhancock.com/mithras-and-jesus-barbierof2/<br /><br />John Bartram's site Origins of Christianity is also worth a look.<br />https://sites.google.com/site/originsofchristianity/<br />It is billed as 'Archaeology of Christian Origins', and emphasises the importance of connections to the Roman Imperial families, and particularly that the early references are all to 'Chrest' rather than 'Christ', 'good' rather than 'anointed'. <br />Odin's Ravenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10138497698247404499noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357316514436369105.post-88439019684677895242017-01-11T02:04:01.159+00:002017-01-11T02:04:01.159+00:00Hi OR
Interesting observations - I never worry abo...Hi OR<br />Interesting observations - I never worry about moving stones etc, unless you think it's magic or aliens, the fact is they managed it; what is not seen use and movement of timbers. I feel sorry for those areas with no stone in the UK - they must have been culturally excluded; it's amazing how the Dutch ever got through the Neolithic. <br />The Neolithic farmers had well developed timber architecture, it is part of the package, they managed to colonise large mainland areas prior to the Bronze Age.<br />Apart from Stonehenge, the age of stone monuments is over by the BA, except where stone has to be used like Orkney.<br />The Early Copper was probably Southern Ireland like Ross Island - then Wales, etc, Cu being relatively common, However the key issue is Tin, which comes from Cornwall. or places like Afghanistan!<br />Great Lakes - bonkers - I think Anglesey had the biggest copper mine in the world up until the discovery and exploitation of the "New World" sources a few hundred years ago.Geoff Carterhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01111820035762957610noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357316514436369105.post-46716616462660793512017-01-10T23:42:17.823+00:002017-01-10T23:42:17.823+00:00Thanks again Geoff. In the second tv programme the...Thanks again Geoff. In the second tv programme they made a skin boat like a curragh and rowed it to the mainland, in virtually ideal conditions, with a helicopter filming them and the bow of an escort boat occasionally nudging into the shots. If their precursors controlled trade around the north of Scotland, they must have been much bolder seamen!<br /><br /> Maybe they should have gone for a kayak, like those of the Eskimos who reached Scotland in the 17th and 18th centuries. <br />http://empire-and-revolution.blogspot.fr/2016/12/the-eskimo-invasion-of-scotland-and.html<br /><br />What would have been their sources of copper and tin? Great Orme's Head in north Wales, or all the way from south Wales? What about the huge deposits of very pure copper around Lake Superior which Barry Fell thought supplied much of the Bronze Age in Europe? Seamen with small ships might have traveled much further than academics like to believe. Would the markets have been in Scandinavia and the Baltic?<br /><br />I'm always amazed by the obligatory demonstration by archaeologists of how to move a medium sized stone a short distance over a smooth and gentle downslope covered in short grass, using equal sized perfectly rounded long wooden rollers, and modern ropes and metal attachments, whilst clad in their ritual garb of plastic helmets and yellow jackets. I think the megalith builders would also have been amazed. <br /><br />This time however a local revealed the secret of lithic locomotive lubrication. Kelp. They could slide the stones over it more easily. Surely this will open up scope for grants and dissertations on the importance of kelp in the stone age, and whether this was a limiting factor in the production or distribution of megaliths. How much kelp could have been taken sustainably? Did 'over-kelping' end the megalithic era? More research needed.<br />Odin's Ravenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10138497698247404499noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357316514436369105.post-12160395777005089112017-01-09T23:23:30.872+00:002017-01-09T23:23:30.872+00:00Hi OR
Re: TV
I have studiously avoided watching th...Hi OR<br />Re: TV<br />I have studiously avoided watching this, it contains scenes that intelligent viewers may find upsetting.[I heard thatit goes all wobbly at 51 mins].<br />RE: Orkney.<br />I have my own observations; the reason that these islands are important - like other islands - is that they were the first areas colonised by Agriculturalists.<br />The extensive use of stone reflects the loss of tree cover and a shortage of building timber.<br />The continued importance of Orkney is that it controls the northern approaches to the Irish Sea via the Minch, this is vital as the source of copper / Tin / Bronze for Northern Europe - which does not go via southern coast of England - hence the strategic [cultural] connection which I am sure they talked about.<br />Shetland would be important in terms of Trade and also has no trees, but could never be as important as the Orkney.<br />NB most of the the oldest neolithic structures in Europe are timber, although in Britain we are very poor at identifying them, and the ones we find we think are "Ritual" which actually a euphemism for not understood.Geoff Carterhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01111820035762957610noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357316514436369105.post-47967702530603411852017-01-09T00:06:20.271+00:002017-01-09T00:06:20.271+00:00Thanks Geoff. Perhaps you saw the TV programme abo...Thanks Geoff. Perhaps you saw the TV programme about stone structures in Orkney, and how the idea probably spread south. Have you any views, even though they are of stone rather than wood? Somebody mentioned to me that the Shetlands are even further north and they also have lots of stone structures, so perhaps they may be even older.Odin's Ravenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10138497698247404499noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357316514436369105.post-31483701158106434892017-01-05T07:45:37.630+00:002017-01-05T07:45:37.630+00:00Hi OR - seasons greetings
Yes - I saw this; it is...Hi OR - seasons greetings <br />Yes - I saw this; it is not that unusual, Vindolanda - is a good local example which has used this model. <br />http://www.vindolanda.com/<br />Getting people to pay to do archaeology is an old business model - The Earthwatch Institute - spring to mind. http://eu.earthwatch.org/<br />Archaeology is has often depended on private subscription, <br />More recently, there is a lot of crowdfunding - such as http://digventures.com/<br /><br />It is an interesting model - which I am sure will be extended to British heath services, and perhaps education - professionals are just not very profitable.Geoff Carterhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01111820035762957610noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357316514436369105.post-17268286168176747192017-01-04T22:33:13.677+00:002017-01-04T22:33:13.677+00:00Happy and productive 2017 to you. Thanks for all t...Happy and productive 2017 to you. Thanks for all the posts.<br />I wonder if this article shows the future for archaeology. It is about someone with a degree in archaeology, who worked as a toll booth operator, and invested his savings buying a field under which lies a lost Welsh town. Now people can pay him £50 per day to be an 'archaeologist for a day' in helping him dig it up. <br />http://www.thedailysheeple.com/man-drops-life-savings-on-land-parcel-discovers-massive-13th-century-lost-city_012017<br /><br />Odin's Ravenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10138497698247404499noreply@blogger.com